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  • Reporters w/o Borders: Police urged to probe deeper after 17-year-ol

    Police urged to probe deeper after 17-year-old arrested for editor's murder

    Reporters without borders (press release), France
    Jan 22 2007

    Following the arrest of a 17-year-old youth who has reportedly
    confessed to the 19 January murder of newspaper editor and columnist
    Hrant Dink, Reporters Without Borders today joined the executives and
    staff of Dink's newspaper, the bilingual Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos,
    in urging the police to probe further with a view to identifying those
    who may have been behind the murder or in any other way responsible.

    "It would be inconceivable for the police to content themselves with
    just arresting the man who pulled the trigger," the press freedom
    organisation said. "The Turkish authorities must make it clear they
    are determined to find and punish any instigators, and to identify all
    those who may have had a role in this tragedy. This is an essential
    condition for preventing any recurrence and for healing the wounds
    left by this awful murder."

    Ogun Samast, 17, was arrested on the evening of 20 January in the
    city of Samsun, on the Black Sea, as he was returning from Istanbul to
    Tabzron, his home town. He is said to have admitted to firing several
    shots at Dink at around 2 p.m. on 19 January outside the offices of the
    privately-owned Agos in Istanbul. He reportedly said he did not regret
    shooting Dink and did it because Dink "insulted the Turkish people."

    The Istanbul state prosecutor yesterday said the police were trying to
    determine whether Samast acted alone. Samast was arrested after his
    father recognised him when video footage recorded by a neighbouring
    shop's surveillance camera was broadcast on television. The police
    have also detained seven other people.

    Dink had been the target of several prosecutions for referring to the
    1915 massacres of Armenians and had received a six-month suspended
    sentence in 2005. At the time of his death, he had been facing a
    possible three-year prison sentence because of an interview he gave
    to Reuters in which he referred to the 1915 massacres as "genocide."

    Around 10,000 people gathered outside the offices of Agos in Sisli,
    a district on the European side of Istanbul, on the evening of 19
    January in homage to Dink.
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